A raceme of gray dogwood (Cornus racemosa) flowers. Note the white branches of the raceme. Inset: A ripe fruit of gray dogwood; note that the raceme’s branches have turned red.
Gray dogwood flowers occur in dome-shaped panicles with creamy-white branches 1.5-2.5″ across and tall. Individual flowers are 1/4″ across with a short calyx bearing four short teeth, four lance-shaped, creamy-white petals, four stamenns with pale yellow anthers, and a central, green-tipped style. The fruit is a small (1/4″), ball-shaped drupe, white when mature; when the fruit is mature, the branches of the panicle turn from white to bright red. Rough-leaved dogwood and red-osier dogwood also produce white fruit, but their panicles are flat-topped, not domed; the panicle branches are also not red in red-osier dogwood, but they are in rough-leaved dogwood so carefully inspect the stems (hairy) to see if the specimen in hand might be the latter.
Left: Upper (top image) and lower (bottom image) of a gray dogwood (Cornus racemosa) leaf. Right image: The transition between the orange-brown bark on a young twig (upper half) to the gray bark of an older twig/branch (lower half).
Gray dogwood is a 3-8 feet tall, highly branched shrub with gray or gray-brown bark on the older branches (thus the common name) and pale green to orange-brown twigs. The leaves are opposite, up to 4″ long and 1.5″ across, lance-shaped to oval with rounded or (usually) wedge-shaped bases, smooth along their margins with long, slender tips. The lower surfaces of the leaves are pale green to white while upper surfaces range from medium green to yellowish- or reddish-green. There are 3-4 curved lateral veins on either side of the midrib (red-osier dogwood has 5-6), but the rest of the venation is pinnate.
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